The applicant, Stanford Manor Body Corporate, is a sectional title body corporate and community scheme. The respondent, Ms Moema, is the registered owner of Unit 25 in the scheme. The body corporate, through its managing agent CSI Property Management, alleged that the respondent had fallen into arrears with levy payments and owed R11 120.90, inclusive of interest and debt collection fees. The managing agent stated that reminders and notifications had been sent and attempts had been made to secure a payment arrangement, but these efforts were unsuccessful. The applicant approached the Community Schemes Ombud Service under section 38 of the CSOS Act seeking an order under section 39(1)(e) for payment of the arrear levies and also sought an order compelling payment of future monthly contributions. The respondent, though served with notice of the application on 7 September 2023, filed no submissions.
The application was partly granted. The claim for an order compelling payment of future monthly contributions was refused. The respondent was declared liable for arrear levies in the amount of R11 120.90, inclusive of interest and debt collection fees, and was ordered to pay that amount in six equal monthly instalments of R1 853.48 starting on 1 January 2024, with the remaining instalments due on the first day of each succeeding month. No interest would accrue during the permitted instalment period. The order stated that it did not affect the respondent's regular monthly levies and ancillary payments, and that on default of any one instalment the full outstanding amount would become immediately due and payable. No order as to costs was made.
A unit owner in a sectional title scheme is legally obliged, under the STSMA and the scheme's rules, to pay duly levied contributions to the body corporate. Where the body corporate proves on a balance of probabilities that arrear levies, authorised interest and recoverable collection charges are due, a CSOS adjudicator may order payment under section 39(1)(e) of the CSOS Act. However, a CSOS adjudicator may grant only relief that falls within the categories expressly authorised by section 39 of the CSOS Act and must refuse relief that lies outside that statutory jurisdiction.
The adjudicator observed that owners who default on levies are effectively subsidised by compliant owners and that a body corporate cannot perform its statutory functions without contributions from members. The adjudicator also noted that the determination of the applicable interest rate on overdue amounts is a decision reserved for the body corporate through trustee resolution. The remarks about the practical financial impact of defaults and the necessity of levy payments for scheme management were explanatory rather than essential to the narrow jurisdictional and liability findings.
The decision is significant in South African community schemes jurisprudence because it reinforces the statutory obligation of sectional title owners to pay levies and confirms that CSOS adjudicators may grant monetary relief for arrear contributions under section 39(1)(e) of the CSOS Act where the body corporate proves the debt. It also underscores the jurisdictional limits of CSOS adjudicators: they may not grant relief that falls outside the powers conferred by section 39, even if practically desirable. The case illustrates the interaction between the CSOS Act, the STSMA and prescribed management rules in levy recovery matters.